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Sun, Jul 6th, @5:45pm - 07:00PM
BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
Sun, Jul 6th, @7:00pm - 05:00PM
Lift Every Voice
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This is a true story told by the late Elbert (Eb) Rosson many years ago.  Eb was a master storyteller who had mastered the art of pausing to roll a cigarette at just the right time.  Of course, his accent and cadence were practiced from years of telling stories of his life and the world around him.

Skeered To Death 

We lived in the house at the bridge. ‘Course we never had a car. If we went anywhere, we walked.

One Sunday, Mom and Pap said they was going across the creek to the Bates’ house. I knowed they had some girls about my age and I was sorta sweet on one, so I went along. I musta been about 16. We waded the creek down below the little field that we called the “Back Band.” This was named the “Bates Ford.”

We stayed ‘till about sundown, then Pap said, “We best go home.” I was having a good time, and I thought it would sound big to say, “You all go on. I ain’t skeered, and I will come when I get ready.” Pap grinned and said, “All right, we are going now.”

This musta been about November ‘cause we had been gathering corn, I remember. Any how the first thing I knowed, it was gittin’ dark. I decided to wait ‘till the moon came up. I was gittin’ sorta uneasy by now, but finally Mr. Bates said, “Boy, you better go home.” So I lit out.

I made it fine ‘till I got to the creek. We had a foot-log across the creek, and it had already come a big frost, so I decided not to wade the creek, but to walk the log. I was bare-footed, and when I started out the log my feet slipped. So, I sat down astraddle of the log, and, as the old saying, I “cooned” my way across. I was already gettin’ purty nervous.

When I got off the log and started up the path, a big ol’ swamp rabbit jumped up right under my feet. I jumped to run, and by now I was in the corn field. I saw something keeping up with me.

I went across the corn field knocking stalks as I went. They was a rail fence at the edge of the field, and I made for a low place so I could jump it. When I come down I landed in the middle of a bunch of hogs that was bedded down. I guess it skeered them ‘cause they went “Woof Woof” and run everwhar.

I wasn’t sure it was a bear or a hog, and I wasn’t taking no chance. So, I lit out in a beeline for the house, and after falling down in a gully and running through a fence, I just made it to the porch where I just fell down ‘till Pap came & got me.

 
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